SENTENCE TYPES AND ATTRIBUTES
Sentence
type
Attributes
Periodic The most important idea comes at the end of the sentence.
Loose The most important idea is revealed early and the sentence unfolds loosely after that.
Parallel
A parallel sentence (sometimes called a balanced sentence) contains parts of equal
grammatical structure or rhetorical value in a variety of combinations.
Some examples of parallel structures:
- The dog ate voraciously, joyously, and noisily. (The verb ate is modified by
three multisyllabic adverbs, which seems some-what lofty in style for such a
mundane act as a dog eating.)
- Joyce was worn down by the constant invasion of her co-workers, by their
insistent stares, by their noisy whispers, and by their unveiled disdain. She knew
she had to find another job. (The parallel phrases are set off by commas; this is
also an example of anaphora.)
Repetition
Types of repetition in sentences:
Anaphora: the repetition of the same word or words at the beginning of a series of
phrases, clauses, or sentences
Epistrophe: the repetition of the same word or words at the end of successive
phrases or clauses
Asyndeton: conjunctions are omitted between words, phrases, or clauses
Chiasmus: two corresponding pairs ordered this way a/b/b/a
Polysyndeton: the use of conjunctions between each word, phrase, or clause
Grammatical
sentence
types
- Simple: 1 subject, 1 verb, modifiers, complements. Simple sentences are short,
direct, and in combination with more complex sentences can be used for emphasis.
- Compound: 2 independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction (use the
mnemonic “fanboys:” for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so)
- Complex: contains an independent clause and a (dependent) subordinate clause
- Compound-complex: contains two independent clauses and a dependent